Showing posts with label Pakistan vs Zimbabwe 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan vs Zimbabwe 2015. Show all posts
Monday, May 25, 2015

Pakistan welcomes cricket back with a BANG! The right kind of BANG!

Pakistan's highest successful chase in a T20 International came during the World T20 in 2012 against Bangladesh when they chased down a target of 176 with ease and won the match by 8 wickets. Pakistan equaled that record chase of 176 in a T20 International in the second T20 against Zimbabwe on Sunday; and just two days prior to that, Pakistan successfully chased a target of 173 against the same opposition.

Essentially, Pakistan recorded its highest and second highest chase in T20 Internationals in the last two T20s played in Lahore! What a way to welcome cricket back into your country. If someone was given the task to script a movie on the return of cricket to Pakistan, they will not need to shift much from the events of Lahore between Friday and Sunday.

It was purely majestic; all the way from welcoming of Zimbabwe's cricketers at the airport and at hotel to the hunt for tickets, queuing outside Gaddafi for hours in sweltering heat, cheering for the teams as they walked on to the field amidst mini fireworks, singing along the loudest sung Pakistani national anthem ever, cheering at the sight of the screen that spelled out that this was the first ever T20 International to be played in Lahore, raising sound levels by various decibels at Sami's twin strikes, being entertained by Ahmed Shehzad's imaginary selfie, witnessing two imposing innings by Mukhtar Ahmed that involved some audacious shots, screaming at the top of our lungs when Afridi walked out to bat, being pleased at Afridi hitting the winning runs off the only delivery he faced on Friday and the towering six he smashed on Sunday, watching Umar Akmal finally play an international match at home, guffawing at the all familiar batting collapse on Friday and Sunday, biting our nails at the close finishes, and jumping in cheer as Pakistan closed off two good chases!

No scriptwriter could have written it better.

It is debatable whether Pakistan would have managed to chase down the same targets if they were playing anywhere else, but the likely answer to that is no. Being perennial bad chasers, Pakistan's batting has been found desperately wanting in recent times. In its entire history, Pakistan had successfully chased a total of 150 or above only 3 times prior to these two T20s against Zimbabwe in Lahore. In its past 4 T20s, Pakistan managed scores of 141-5 (20), 127 (20), 140-3 (19.1), and 96-9 (20). None of them were obviously played at home.

Mukhtar Ahmed had a lot to do with Pakistan winning those games despite facing stiff targets; however, I believe it also had a lot to do with the venue. Batting in home conditions seems to bring out the best out of majority of the batsmen. All records will show that. It definitely has something to do with the familiarity of the conditions, but it also has a lot to do with the confidence derived from knowing your conditions and the adrenaline from the supportive crowd. Confidence and adrenaline does wonders to a batsmen's mind.
Mukhtar struggled to a dogged 30 odd in his debut T20 in Bangladesh last month. In contrast, his two innings in Lahore were commanding and dominating. Ahmed Shehzad had struggled to even rotate strike effectively in the past 6-8 months, yet he played a free flowing innings in the first T20 in Lahore, his hometown, his home ground. For too long the world has seen the likes of Virat Kohli, Hashim Amla, and Steve Smith dominate bowling attacks in their backyards and for too long Pakistanis have been denied of watching their batsmen do the same.

Finally cricket came back home. Finally Pakistan's batsmen looked dominant again!


Here's hoping for more dominance in the upcoming ODIs and continued international cricket in Pakistan.

Make your pitch on this post...



Labels: , , , , ,


Thursday, May 21, 2015

Pakistan welcomes back International Cricket

I was in Lahore on 2nd March 2009. It was my brother's wedding. The baraat had driven down from Rawal Pindi to Lahore in the morning and we drove back the same evening after the wedding festivities.

The next day, 3rd March 2009, was my brother's valima in Rawal Pindi. I woke up early morning to catch the third day's play of the 2nd test between Pakistan and Sri Lanka, but I was in for a rude shock.

Sri Lanka's team bus, on route from the hotel to Gaddafi Stadium, had been attacked by militants. The unfathomable event had happened. Teams like Australia were already apprehensive to tour Pakistan, but after this, no team wanted to.

By the afternoon a number of our guests who were supposed to drive from Lahore to Pindi started cancelling due to a blocked motorway.

Having never lived in Pakistan, I happened to be in Pakistan on that tragic day when international cricket disappeared from Pakistan forever.

6 years on, I happen to be in Pakistan once again for yet another wedding and coincidentally it is the day when international cricket returns to Pakistan!

That is quite a coincidence considering that my visits to Pakistan are usually only for weddings. But completely apt as well. Somehow, nothing unites us Pakistanis more than shaadis and cricket!

Having been personally affected by the shooting on Sri Lanka's team bus 6 years ago, it was an absolute delight to see Lahore prepare for the arrival of the Zimbabwe cricket team.

What has been even more pleasing is the excitement resulting from this home series for Pakistan.

Gaddafi stadium was sold out in the matter of minutes.

Social media is abuzz with #cricketcomeshome and #thankyouzimbabwe trending all over twitter and facebook.

Daraz.pk is shipping tickets all over the country.

Pepsi and Boys in Green are giving away 2 FREE tickets for each match.

For the next 10 days, Lahore is going to be in a cricket frenzy.

One that it has not experienced since 2004 when India came to town.

Finally cricket is back home and we hope that it is here to stay with other teams following suit in the near future.

Pakistanis celebrate a number of days like 23rd March, 14th August, 25th December, among others. 22nd May is another day that will be celebrated in the years to come as the day international cricket returned to Pakistan!

Make your pitch on this post...



Labels: , , ,


Sunday, May 3, 2015

Pakistan, what a fall from grace for the once upon a time KINGS of ODIs

My first few memories of watching cricket on TV or at the stadium involve Pakistan winning tournament after tournament in Sharjah. Aaqib Javed taking a hatrick of LBWs against India, Waqar Younis clean bowling Ian Bishop off the final ball of an ODI to lead Pakistan to a 1 run, Wasim Akram clean bowling Hughes, Rackemann, and Alderman off successive deliveries, are some of my first memories watching cricket on TV or at the stadium in Sharjah.

Pakistan were unbeatable in Sharjah. They always beat India, they won every tournament that took place there, they were the Kings of the Desert! They were the best team in the world and Imran Khan was everyone's hero even before 1992 happened.

Then Pakistan won the World Cup in 1992 and they were officially the best team in the World. It was a time when Indian commentators like Sunil Gavaskar would publicly talk about the danger posed by Pakistan and kept saying not to count them out when every newspaper carried headlines of Pakistan's disastrous World Cup campaign.

There were more victories after that World Cup win. More Sharjah tophies were won, there were bilateral series wins, a tri series win in Singapore, a tri series win in Australia, and there was another World Cup final.

The 90s was a dream era for every Pakistan cricket fan. Not only did Pakistan win a lot of ODIs, they had a team full of match winners and they held a lot of ODI records.

Highest team total against a test playing nation, highest individual score, best bowling figures, most individual hatricks, team with most bowlers to take a hatrick, most number of wickets, fastest century, highest partnership for any wicket. Individual and team brilliance shone like never before for Pakistan.

If you grew up watching Pakistan dominate ODI cricket in the 90s, you must be feeling sick in the stomach after their 3-0 loss to Bangladesh. To witness Pakistan fall to 9th in ODI rankings and also watch each and every single one of those ODI records broken over the years has been nothing short of a heartbreak.

Where did it all go wrong for Pakistan? What happened? Where are all the heroes?

Typical talk of a bad domestic structure, board level politics, player politics is mere talk. All that existed back then as well. Player rivalries have been part and parcel of Pakistan cricket for as long as it has existed. There have been no bigger rivalries in Pakistan cricket than Imran-Javed and Wasim-Waqar, yet Pakistan rose above all that and dominated opponents on the field.

The domestic structure and the board was just as dis-functional in the 90s as well. Yet Pakistan was a great team on the field. Pakistan changed more captains and coaches in the 90s than they ever have in their history. Yet they played two World Cup finals and won other ODI tournaments.

All the problems one discusses today existed two decades ago as well so it can't be just that.

Pakistan were so good back then that despite a mediocre decade in ODIs, they still have the third best overall record in ODIs. However, they are such a bad ODI team now that they are on the verge of missing out participation in the Champions Trophy 2017 and face the potential shame of having to play a qualifying round to take part in the World Cup 2019!

What a damning fall from grace!

Names like Javed Miandad, Saeed Anwar, Inzamam Ul Haq, Ijaz Ahmed used to give bowlers sleepless nights. While Imran Khan, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Shoaib Akhtar, Saqlain Mushtaq have given the same sleepless nights to opposition batsmen. Yet now opposing batsmen and bowlers lick their lips at prospects of improving their career figures when playing against Pakistan.

There is not a single name in Pakistan that would spell fear in the mind of any cricketer from any team. That includes the eternal minnows Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, and even associates like Ireland and UAE who have all fancied their chances against Pakistan in recent clashes.

What I fail to understand is that during this same period, Pakistan have taken great strides in test cricket. There was a test win over Australia after 15 years. There was a test series win over Australia after 20 years, and that too a clean sweep. There was a clean sweep of the world number 1 test team as well. Forced to make UAE their home, Pakistan have created a fortress there and have not lost a test series in the UAE for as long as that has been their "home"; over half a decade.

Batsmen like Younis Khan, Azhar Ali, Asad Shafiq, Ahmed Shehzad, Mohammad Hafeez, and even their captain Misbah have exelled in tests at home and away. Many have managed what greats like Inzamam could not; like scoring test centuries in South Africa. Even batsmen that have been tried in tests over the past 5 years but have not played too regularly like Taufeeq Umar, Khurram Manzoor, and Shan Masood have done brilliantly.

The same names however, have been utter failures in ODIs.

It is the same system, the same board, the same management, and the same players who have done exceedingly well in tests. Yet when it has come to ODIs they have failed miserably.

Pakistan is fast becoming England but the problem is that they don't play as many tests as England do. It is not that tests have been given a higher priority resulting in Pakistan's relative success in the format as compared to ODIs.

It is complete chance that Pakistan has become a team that has done well in test cricket but failed to do the same in ODIs.

The problems they face in ODIs, i.e. strike rotation, big hitting, and constant mistakes on the field, are not really problems in test cricket. Hafeez and Shehzad can manage to hit a boundary in every over without rotating the strike in tests; they can do that all day if they wish to. Doing the same in ODIs is what causes problems.

I don't know when Pakistan will come out of this rut. Surely it can't get worse after losing to Bangladesh 3-0. Or can it with Zimbabwe coming home?

Pakistan have been trying to revive international cricket at home for as long as it was taken away from them. It has been 6 years since Pakistan has hosted an international cricket match on its land, and they have finally managed to convince Zimbabwe to come over. But an ODI series between the 9th and 11th ranked teams is definitely not what the PCB would have hoped for.

Not many watched the series against Bangladesh. After the 3-0 loss to them, Pakistan cricket has lost more fans. I am not sure if the TV rights have been secured for the Pakistan vs Zimbabwe ODIs but I highly doubt any channel would want to get their hands on that. Even though cricket is coming back to Pakistan after 6 years, I really do not know if they will be able to fill the stadiums in this heat for a team that has been appalling in ODIs.

In the 90s, we used to drive for 4 hours to reach Sharjah to watch Imran Khan, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Saeed Anwar, Inzamam Ul Haq. Even Aamer Sohail, Ijaz Ahmed, and Saleem Malik had fans. Flash in the pan players like Basit Ali, Zahid Fazal, and Mohammad Zahid also made fans flock the Sharjah stadium.

Who would fans go for now? There is not a single name in Pakistan's ODI line up that one can wish to watch. There are no great players. There is no superstar. There is absolutely no one.

It is great for Pakistan and world cricket that the sport is returning to Pakistan's land. But the timing could not have been worse for Pakistan.

I know this whole rant is all over the place. But that is what I feel like at the moment as Pakistan cricket fan. All over the place!

Make your pitch on this post...



Labels: , , , ,


Tuesday, March 3, 2015

ICC World Cup 2015: What is the 'Par Score'?

This article first appeared on DAWN.
When Pakistan completed its innings against Zimbabwe on Sunday, the popular opinion was that 235 was not enough. Social media was abuzz with predictions of Zimbabwe's triumph and how many overs they would take to complete the task.
However, what transpired was expected by very few. It was a tremendous effort by Pakistan's bowlers, despite sloppy their fielding, to overcome the odds and defend a sub-par total against a team which had scores of 277, 286 and 289 which chasing against South Africa, UAE and the West Indies, respectively.
But was 235 really a sub-par total? Everyone from commentators to TV experts and fans have been stating that the par total in this World Cup is 300. I don't think that is true. I think 300 is a winning total, not a par one; more often than not teams scoring 300 will defend it successfully.
I did some digging to figure out whether this hypothesis is true or not, and the results are quite interesting. The analysis considers ODIs played in Australia and New Zealand in past 5 years, starting from 1st January 2010, and breaks down the results for day matches and day/night matches.
ODI Matches in Australia
In all ODI games played in Australia in the past five years, the team batting first has won 37 times, while the team fielding first has won 33 times.
Out of those 37 wins, a team scored 300 or more 14 times and won the match. There are only four instances of a team successfully chasing 300 or more, with the most recent one being Australia's chase of 304 against England in January 2010. Australia has managed three out of those four successful chases of above 300, with the other one managed by India against Sri Lanka in February 2012.
Those four chases came in Hobart, Sydney, and Brisbane. A total of 300 or more has never been chased in Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide, or Canberra in the past five years. Every time a team has scored 300 in any of those grounds, they have won.
Out of those 37 wins by teams batting first, a total between 200 and 300 was defended successfully as many as 23 times; that is a success rate of over 60 per cent. Additionally, almost 60 per cent of the wins by teams chasing targets (19 out of 33), was when the target was below 270.
It is interesting to note that all of the four successful run chases of 300 or more were in day/night games. A total of 300 or more has never been chased in a day game in Australia in the past five years. In fact the highest successful run chase in a day game in Australia is 262.
Therefore, I do not think that 300 is a par score in Australia. It is a winning score. A par score is more around 260 to 270. A total of 270 or more has been defended successfully 22 times, and chased successfully 10 times.




















ODI Matches in New Zealand
In New Zealand, the numbers tell a different story. In all ODIs since January 1, 2010, teams batting first have won 26 matches, while the team fielding first have won 31 matches. In day games, the results are more even with 14 wins for teams batting first and 13 wins for teams fielding first. However, in day/night matches, it is interesting to note that teams fielding first have won more games (18) than teams batting first (12).
In every single one of the 26 matches that the teams won while batting first, they posted a total of above 240. In all but two matches, the total was above 265, while in 14 matches a team scored 300 or more and won. That is a success rate of more than 50 per cent for teams scoring 300 or more.
A total of 300 or more has been chased successfully only twice in New Zealand in the past five years, with both instances witnessed during this World Cup - Ireland's win against West Indies and Sri Lanka's win against England. In fact, the three highest successful run chases in New Zealand in the past five years have taken place during this World Cup - the above mentioned matches and Zimbabwe's win against the UAE. Two of those successful run chases took place in Nelson, while one was in Wellington. Such totals have not been chased successfully in Dunedin, Auckland, or Christchurch.
It is also imperative to point out that these three run chases of 310, 305, and 286 by Sri Lanka, Ireland, and Zimbabwe respectively came in day games. Of the 13 successful run chases in day games in New Zealand, only six have been of scores of 240 or more.
Out of the 18 successful run chases in day/night matches in New Zealand, nine were of targets in excess of 240, but all were well below 300. A total of 300 or more has never been chased in New Zealand in a day/night match in the past five years. The highest-ever successful run chase in a day/night match in New Zealand is 276, which was also the highest successful run chase in New Zealand prior to this World Cup, achieved by the Kiwis against Australia in March 2010.
A total of above 240 has been chased successfully only 15 times in New Zealand with nine of them of scores between 240 and 270. A score of 240 and above has been defended successfully as many as 26 times. That is a significant difference; teams batting first and scoring 240 or more win 63 per cent of the matches in New Zealand.
240 is definitely a good score in New Zealand, while 270 can be considered a par one. 300 is undoubtedly a winning total in New Zealand, especially in day/night games.
Significance for Pakistan
Coming back to Pakistan, taking note of these numbers is important for their next two matches against the UAE and South Africa. Both the matches will be played in New Zealand and both will be day/night games.
One must remember that the highest successful run chase in a day/night game in New Zealand in the past five years is 276. The par score in a day/night game in New Zealand is around 270. If Pakistan can bat first and post a total in the range of 260 to 280, its chances of winning will be very high. Even if they are up against AB De Villiers. If Pakistan end up bowling first against South Africa then they need to somehow restrict the Proteas to below 240, otherwise their chances will diminish.

Make your pitch on this post...



Labels: , , , , ,